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Efficacy, retention and tolerability of everolimus in patients with tuberous sclerosis complex: a survey-based study on patients’ perspectives

Authors :
Daniel Ebrahimi-Fakhari
Johann Philipp Zöllner
Thomas U. Mayer
Hiltrud Muhle
Sascha Meyer
Bianca Zukunft
Christoph Hertzberg
Julia Jacobs
Susanne Schubert-Bast
Kerstin Alexandra Klotz
Jan-Ulrich Schlump
Janina Grau
Frauke Hornemann
Adam Strzelczyk
Karen Müller-Schlüter
Andreas Hahn
Ilka Immisch
Hannah Schäfer
Gerhard Kluger
Charlotte Thiels
Matthias Sauter
Regina Trollmann
Laurent M. Willems
Ulrich Bettendorf
Astrid Bertsche
Hans Hartmann
Susanne Knake
Markus Knuf
Felix von Podewils
Thomas Bast
Susanne Ruf
Karl Martin Klein
Steffen Syrbe
Klaus Marquard
Bernd Wilken
Adelheid Wiemer-Kruel
Felix Rosenow
Gerhard Kurlemann
Source :
CNS Drugs
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Background The approval of everolimus (EVE) for the treatment of angiomyolipoma (2013), subependymal giant cell astrocytoma (2013) and drug-refractory epilepsy (2017) in patients with tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC) represents the first disease-modifying treatment option available for this rare and complex genetic disorder. Objective The objective of this study was to analyse the use, efficacy, tolerability and treatment retention of EVE in patients with TSC in Germany from the patient’s perspective. Methods A structured cross-age survey was conducted at 26 specialised TSC centres in Germany and by the German TSC patient advocacy group between February and July 2019, enrolling children, adolescents and adult patients with TSC. Results Of 365 participants, 36.7% (n = 134) reported the current or past intake of EVE, including 31.5% (n = 115) who were taking EVE at study entry. The mean EVE dosage was 6.1 ± 2.9 mg/m2 (median: 5.6 mg/m2, range 2.0–15.1 mg/m2) in children and adolescents and 4 ± 2.1 mg/m2 (median: 3.7 mg/m2, range 0.8–10.1 mg/m2) in adult patients. An early diagnosis of TSC, the presence of angiomyolipoma, drug-refractory epilepsy, neuropsychiatric manifestations, subependymal giant cell astrocytoma, cardiac rhabdomyoma and overall multi-organ involvement were associated with the use of EVE as a disease-modifying treatment. The reported efficacy was 64.0% for angiomyolipoma (75% in adult patients), 66.2% for drug-refractory epilepsy, and 54.4% for subependymal giant cell astrocytoma. The overall retention rate for EVE was 85.8%. The retention rates after 12 months of EVE therapy were higher among adults (93.7%) than among children and adolescents (88.7%; 90.5% vs 77.4% after 24 months; 87.3% vs 77.4% after 36 months). Tolerability was acceptable, with 70.9% of patients overall reporting adverse events, including stomatitis (47.0%), acne-like rash (7.7%), increased susceptibility to common infections and lymphoedema (each 6.0%), which were the most frequently reported symptoms. With a total score of 41.7 compared with 36.8 among patients not taking EVE, patients currently being treated with EVE showed an increased Liverpool Adverse Event Profile. Noticeable deviations in the sub-items ‘tiredness’, ‘skin problems’ and ‘mouth/gum problems’, which are likely related to EVE-typical adverse effects, were more frequently reported among patients taking EVE. Conclusions From the patients’ perspective, EVE is an effective and relatively well-tolerated disease-modifying treatment option for children, adolescents and adults with TSC, associated with a high long-term retention rate that can be individually considered for each patient. Everolimus therapy should ideally be supervised by a centre experienced in the use of mechanistic target of rapamycin inhibitors, and adverse effects should be monitored on a regular basis.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
CNS Drugs
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c85d03836787c878cfcdc7b7b78a7ec6